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David Cameron

Researcher at University of Oslo

Publications -  1765
Citations -  141776

David Cameron is an academic researcher from University of Oslo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Large Hadron Collider & Breast cancer. The author has an hindex of 154, co-authored 1586 publications receiving 126067 citations. Previous affiliations of David Cameron include Universidade Nova de Lisboa & Cameron International.

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Search for heavy long-lived charged particles with the ATLAS detector in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV

Georges Aad, +3011 more
- 20 Sep 2011 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a search for long-lived charged particles reaching the muon spectrometer is performed using a data sample of 37 pb(-1) from pp collisions at root s = 7 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the LH...
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Abstract S4-5: Adjuvant Treatment with Zoledronic Acid in Stage II/III Breast Cancer. The AZURE Trial (BIG 01/04)

TL;DR: The AZURE trial is an academic study designed to determine whether treatment with ZOL added to standard adjuvant therapy improves DFS and bone metastasis-free survival (BMFS) in a broader range of patients with stage II/III breast cancer.
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Search for single top-quark production via flavour changing neutral currents at 8 TeV with the ATLAS detector

Georges Aad, +2842 more
TL;DR: A search for single top-quarks production via flavour-changing neutral current processes from gluon plus up- or charm-quark initial states in proton–proton collisions at the LHC is presented and an upper limit on the production cross-section multiplied by the t→Wb branching fraction is set.
Journal ArticleDOI

A search for pair-produced resonances in four-jet final states at √s=13 TeV with the ATLAS detector

Morad Aaboud, +2866 more
TL;DR: A search for massive coloured resonances which are pair-produced and decay into two jets is presented, interpreted in a SUSY simplified model where the lightest supersymmetric particle is the top squark, which decays promptly into two quarks through R-parity-violating couplings.